Book Cover: The Joy of Pamphlets

Extremely rough first sketch for the cover of my forthcoming craft guide, The Joy of Pamphlets. It’ll be 700 pages of everything you ever wanted to know about how to do 3-hole bindings for small booklets. Plus there’ll be a whole big section full of history facts about pamphlets down the ages. Like, for example, did you know there was a kind of zine culture in Ancient Greece? Well, maybe there was! And did you know pamphlets used to be used for distributing Tolstoy fan fiction back in olden times? Sure, why not? Anyway, by “forthcoming,” I mean eventually, meaning by November 2019 at the very absolute latest. First, though, back to the real world stuff…

Words I Like

The way you drop is like a stoneMaking out you're flyingBut you've just been thrown.

—The Jesus and Mary Chain, "Drop"

There was a book in the library about Holland. There were lovely foreign names in it and pictures of strangelooking cities and ships. It made you feel so happy.

—James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

In fact, while we read a novel, we are insane—bonkers. We believe in the existence of people who aren't there, we hear their voices, we watch the Battle of Borodino with them, we may even become Napoleon. Sanity returns (in most cases) when the book is closed.

Is it any wonder that no truly respectable society has ever trusted its artists?

—Ursula K. Le Guin,Introduction,The Left Hand of Darkness

"What are my dreams?"

—Jerri Blank

Being a famous artist in the Culture meant at best it was accepted you must possess a certain gritty determination . . . .

—Iain M. Banks,Excession

"I hope you will consider what I arrange, but be skeptical of it."

—John Berger,Ways of Seeing

Some sort of pressure must exist; the artist exists because the world is not perfect. Art would be useless if the world were perfect, as man wouldn’t look for harmony but would simply live in it. Art is born out of an ill-designed world.